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10-letter words that end in ate

  • clofibrate — a medication used in the treatment of heart disease
  • co-operate — If you co-operate with someone, you work with them or help them for a particular purpose. You can also say that two people co-operate.
  • coacervate — either of two liquid phases that may separate from a hydrophilic sol, each containing a different concentration of a dispersed solid
  • coactivate — To cause, or to undergo coactivation.
  • cogenerate — To generate two forms of energy simultaneously.
  • cohabitate — cohabit.
  • collegiate — Collegiate means belonging or relating to a college or to college students.
  • colliquate — to melt or cause to melt
  • comiserate — Obsolete spelling of commiserate.
  • commentate — To commentate means to give a radio or television commentary on an event.
  • compensate — To compensate someone for money or things that they have lost means to pay them money or give them something to replace that money or those things.
  • complanate — having a flattened or compressed aspect
  • complicate — To complicate something means to make it more difficult to understand or deal with.
  • conciliate — If you conciliate someone, you try to end a disagreement with them.
  • concinnate — to arrange or blend together skillfully, as parts or elements; put together in a harmonious, precisely appropriate, or elegant manner.
  • condensate — a substance formed by condensation, such as a liquid from a vapour
  • confiscate — If you confiscate something from someone, you take it away from them, usually as a punishment.
  • conglobate — to form into a globe or ball
  • congregate — When people congregate, they gather together and form a group.
  • consecrate — When a building, place, or object is consecrated, it is officially declared to be holy. When a person is consecrated, they are officially declared to be a bishop.
  • conservate — (dated, transitive) To conserve.
  • consociate — to enter into or bring into friendly association
  • constipate — to cause constipation in
  • consummate — You use consummate to describe someone who is extremely skilful.
  • continuate — continuous
  • conversate — to have a conversation; converse; talk.
  • coordinate — If you coordinate an activity, you organize the various people and things involved in it.
  • coradicate — (of multiple words) derived from the same root
  • corruscate — Dated form of coruscate.
  • coursemate — One who is taking the same academic course.
  • coventrate — To devastate by heavy bombing.
  • crenellate — to supply with battlements
  • cross rate — A cross rate is an exchange rate of two currencies expressed in a third different currency, such as the exchange rate between the euro and the yuan expressed in yen.
  • de-isolate — to remove from isolation.
  • deactivate — If someone deactivates an explosive device or an alarm, they make it harmless or impossible to operate.
  • deallocate — to set apart for a particular purpose; assign or allot: to allocate funds for new projects.
  • deaspirate — to remove any audible breath sound from (a sound)
  • death rate — The death rate is the number of people per thousand who die in a particular area during a particular period of time.
  • debilitate — If you are debilitated by something such as an illness, it causes your body or mind to become gradually weaker.
  • decapitate — If someone is decapitated, their head is cut off.
  • decay-rate — the reciprocal of the decay time.
  • decelerate — When a vehicle or machine decelerates or when someone in a vehicle decelerates, the speed of the vehicle or machine is reduced.
  • deck plate — a purlin plate at the edge of a deck.
  • decolorate — to change or fade in colour
  • decumulate — to heap up; amass; accumulate.
  • dedecorate — (obsolete, transitive) To bring to shame; to disgrace.
  • deescalate — To decrease in intensity or magnitude.
  • deflagrate — to burn or cause to burn with great heat and light
  • degenerate — If you say that someone or something degenerates, you mean that they become worse in some way, for example weaker, lower in quality, or more dangerous.
  • delaminate — to divide or cause to divide into thin layers
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